31/51 Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to food
Document Type: Final Report
Date: 2015 Dec
Session: 31st Regular Session (2016 Feb)
Agenda Item:
Human Rights Council Thirty-first session
Agenda item 3
Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights,
including the right to development
Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to food
Note by the Secretariat
The Secretariat has the honour to transmit to the Human Rights Council the report of the
Special Rapporteur on the right to food, prepared pursuant to Council resolution 22/9. In
the report the Special Rapporteur explores the structural, cultural, legal, economic and
ecological barriers that women face in their fulfilment of the right to food. It identifies
examples of good practice, demonstrating how increased access to and control over assets
on behalf of women, has shown to have positive effects on household food security, child
nutrition and general well-being of the woman and her family. The report encourages States
to focus on gender-sensitive policies in all fields, particularly in the context of climate
change, in order to achieve further improvements in women’s access to their right to food.
Contents
Page
I. Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 3
II. Social, Cultural and Structural Barriers............................................................................................ 4
III. Legal barriers ................................................................................................................................... 5
A. Property rights ......................................................................................................................... 6
B. Intellectual Property Rights ..................................................................................................... 9
IV. Economic barriers ............................................................................................................................ 10
A. Changing global economic policy and the rise of corporate models of agriculture ................. 10
B. The extra burdens on female farmworkers .............................................................................. 11
C. Women’s non-agricultural livelihoods and the right to food ................................................... 13
V. Ecological Barriers - Climate Change .............................................................................................. 14
A. Why women matter in climate change policies? ..................................................................... 15
B. How to ensure gender sensitive climate change policies? ....................................................... 18
VI. Why a gender analysis is necessary to address the right to food? .................................................... 19
VII. Conclusions ...................................................................................................................................... 20
I. Introduction
1. Since the 1945 - UN Charter, equality between men and women has been among the
most fundamental guarantees of human rights. The same principles of equality and non-
discrimination are at the core of the two Covenants, namely on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights (ICESCR) and on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) 1 . Both Covenants in
their respective article 3, oblige States Parties to ensure the equal right of men and women
to the enjoyment of their civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights.
2. The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
(CEDAW) offers guidance on the State obligations to ensure gender equality and non-
discrimination in the enjoyment of all human rights. Its article 14 on Rural Women
introduces concrete measures to create an enabling environment for women to enjoy equal
treatment, in particular, in relation to land and agrarian reform as well as in land resettlement schemes. The Convention also guarantees adequate nutrition for women during
pregnancy and lactation (art. 12). The CEDAW provides good guidance on how violations
of economic, social and cultural rights may be experienced by women in various social
contexts and helps illustrate the need for an integrated approach when addressing women’s
economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to food.
3. Notwithstanding the legal framework designed to protect them, women experience
poverty and hunger at disproportionate levels. Institutionalized gender discrimination and
violence still impose barriers that prevent women from enjoying their economic, social and
cultural rights and specifically the right to adequate food and nutrition, and the status of
women and girls has not substantially improved, despite recurrent calls for the inclusion of
a gender perspective to development programs and to social policies.
4. Women account for 70% of the world’s hungry and are disproportionately affected
by malnutrition and food insecurity. 2 This ratio is overwhelming in some developing and
Least Developed Countries, for example, more than one third of women in several South-
Asian countries being underweight 3 . Poor nutrition, lack of healthcare, social protection,
limited economic opportunities and general neglect has excluded more women from global
society than the number of men killed in 20 th
century wars, combined. 4
5. On the other hand, female farmers are responsible for cultivating, ploughing and
harvesting more than 50% of the world’s food.5 In sub Saharan Africa and the Caribbean,
women produce up to 80% of basic foodstuffs and in Asia women constitute 50-90 percent
of the labour force dedicated to rice production. 6 Moreover, in many parts of the world
majority of female farmers mainly engaged in subsistence farming.
1 Article 2 para 1 in respective Covenant.
2 See (A/HRC/16/40) Study of the Human Rights Council Advisory Committee on discrimination in
the context of the right to food, para 29
3 K. Von Grebmer et al. "Global Hunger Index: The Challenge of Hunger — Building Resilience to
Achieve Food and Nutrition Security." Bonn: Welthungerhilfe; Washington D.C.: International Food
Policy Research Institute; Dublin: Concern Worldwide, (2013).
3 FAO, http://www.fao.org/ag/agn/nutrition/bgd_en.stm
4 A.A. Pisciotta, Sympoium: Making the case: Rule of Law in the Emerging Development Agenda :
Post-2015 Development Goals for Gender Equality and Empowerment of Women, 21 Sw. J. Int’l L.
303, 304 (2015). P 304 and 305.
5 Op Cit, (A/HRC/60/40) para 29
6 http://www.fao.org/docrep/x0262e/x0262e16.htm
6. Although women produce and provide food they are often the last ones to access
food for themselves. Women tend to remain invisible in decision-making processes and
women are rarely an individual rights-holders, rather than a community members, mothers,
farmers or care givers. Indeed, gender gaps are observed in access to all productive
resources, such as land, seeds, fertilizers, pest control measures and mechanical tools, credit
and extension services. According to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United
Nations (FAO), “…inequalities between men and women in their access to productive
resources, services and opportunities are one of the causes of underperformance in the
agriculture sector, and contribute to deficiencies in food and nutrition security, economic
growth and overall development.”7
7. Improving this situation for women would lead to important advantages for society
as a whole. It is estimated that closing the gender gap in agricultural yields would increase
agricultural output in developing countries by between 2.5 and 4 percent. This in turn,
could reduce the number of undernourished people in the world in the order of 12–17
percent, or as much as 150 million people. 8
8. Considering the vital importance of women to the global food systems, as well as, to
family budgets, this report will first outline the persistent discrimination and structural
barriers that women and girls face in several fields. Despite the recognition of the vital role
of women in international human rights law and policies, the situation of women with
regards to implementation of right to food remains critical. This report will deal with the
cultural, legal, economic, and ecological barriers that hinder the equal implementation of
the right to food. It further addresses the positive role that women can play in developing
solution to the posed challenges such as eliminating hunger, maintaining food security and
preserving natural resources. The report particularly focuses on the importance of gender-
sensitive policies in the context of climate change, and the particular vulnerability of rural
women.
II. Social, Cultural and Structural Barriers
9. Women are disadvantaged on several social levels, largely due to the influence of
patriarchal systems. All societies practice some form of social structuring based on gender
roles and the impact of this has major ramifications in developing countries where
resources are especially scarce. Social stratification affects women’s right to produce food
by preventing them from accessing the inputs of production. This can occur either as a
result of discriminatory legal barriers or from the way the market forces operate, putting
women in a disadvantaged position. Women are also affected by these patriarchal structures
that facilitate unequal treatment in the labour market. Even where women’s equal legal
rights exist, these often fail to supersede structural barriers.
10. Social segregation based on gender, when combined with other forms of
discrimination based on religion, race, ethnicity, class and caste, disadvantages women
even further.
11. For example, indigenous women living in rural areas are more likely to be
particularly disadvantaged in terms of the fulfillment of their rights, a trend seen in Sub-
7 CEDAW – A Tool for Gender Sensitive Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Program
Formulation, http://www.fao.org/docrep/017/i3153e/i3153e.pdf. p.1.
8 FAO, “The State of Food and Agriculture Women In Agriculture – Closing the Gender Gap for
Development”, (Rome 2011), p iv.
Saharan Africa where indigenous women lack access the same level of rights to land,
health, and education as non-indigenous women of this country. 9
12. Girls and women suffer from discrimination in relation to their right to food at all
stages in life. In many countries, females receive less food than their male partners, due to a
lower social status. In extreme cases, a preference for male children may lead to female
infanticide, including by deprivation of food. 10
Some mothers stop breastfeeding girls
prematurely in order to try and get pregnant with a male, which could increase risks of
infection and other risks if impure water is used with formula. Similar discrimination
applies to older women who tend to be less literate than older men, in many parts of the
world; this limits women’s employability, participation and voice in community
development activities and makes them less likely to be able to provide for themselves.
13. Structural violence is an under-examined barrier to women’s right to adequate food
and nutrition. Gender-based violence, which is a primary form of discrimination, impedes
women from engaging in their own right to adequate food and nutrition, and efforts to
overcome hunger and malnutrition. 11
Some men control women’s behavior and monitor
women’s food work in households. A woman’s perceived failure to adequately prepare
food and meals is a common justification for “disciplinary” action.
14. Furthermore, girls and adolescent women induced by tradition or forced into child
marriage and adolescent pregnancy, suffer the consequences of a high work burden and
deprivation of their child rights, including their right to adequate nutrition and education.
They are required to perform heavy amounts of domestic work, and are responsible for
raising children while still children themselves. 12
Adolescent pregnancy is a typical
outcome of child marriage and complications during pregnancy and childbirth are the
second cause of death for 15-19 year-old girls globally. 13
III. Legal barriers
15. The reasons behind the failure to women’s access to adequate food can arguably be
linked to two structural disconnects which exist at the crossroads between Women’s Rights
and the Right to Food. 14
The first disconnect refers to the failure in international law to
fully endow women with their right to food. In the Universal Declaration on Human Rights
(UDHR) and the ICESCR, the right to food is accorded to himself and his family. Although
the ICESCR General Comment 12 and other documents have underscored the non-
discriminatory intention of the right to food, the archaic language of patriarchy taints the
UDHR and treaty language. Concurrently the economic and social rights of the ICESCR
are generally reviewed in CEDAW, but not the right to food, which is indirectly touched
upon only through a call for rural women. In CEDAW, as in the Convention of the Rights
9 Alternative report to the democratic republic of Congo’s periodic report to CEDAW (2013)http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/cedaw/docs/ngos/JointNGOsubmission_DRCForTheSes
sion55_en.pdf
10 See E/CN.4/2002/83, para.74.
11 Bellows, Jenderedjian. 2016. Chap 3, Violence and the Right to Adequate food and Nutrition, in
Bellows et al. pp. 108-161 (108).
12 UNICEF, Early Marriage: A Harmful Traditional Practice,
http://www.unicef.org/publications/files/Early_Marriage_12.lo.pdf
13 Adolescent Pregnany, WHO Media center, http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs364/en/
14 Bellows, Valente, Lemke, Núñez BdL. 2016. Gender, Nutrition, and the Human Right to Adequate
Food: Toward an Inclusive Framework. Routledge.
of Child (CRC), food access and adequacy for adult women and teenage girls are addressed
only on behalf of pregnant and breastfeeding females . 15
16. The second disconnect concerns the structural separation of nutrition from the
human right to adequate food, which has focused on increasing food production and not on
broad and equal food access. UN treaty law, whether ICESCR, CEDAW or the Rights of
Child (CRC), does not develop nutrition as constitutive of a right to food for all women, but
rather for women who are pregnant or breastfeeding, thus focusing on women in their
reproductive role as mothers. 16
17. Women additionally face numerous legal barriers in domestic law, which prevents
them from fully realizing their right to food, including property rights, land rights and
intellectual property rights. These legal barriers also prevent women from maintaining
livelihoods that provide sustainable incomes necessary to purchase food, thus challenging
women’s right to food and ability to achieve food security.
18. Rather than enabling women to secure stable livelihoods, both formal and customary
laws are often barriers to women’s economic independence. As noted by the FAO, “credit
markets are not gender-neutral”, and women may find themselves prohibited from entering
into contracts, opening bank accounts, or from entering into loan agreements. 17
19. Legal barriers also prevent men and women from equally benefiting from paid
employment through the sanctioning of systems of overt discrimination against women in
the workplace. As of 2014, 77 countries, out of 140 countries with reported data, still had
legal restrictions on the type of paid employment activities available to women. 18
Even
when equal employment opportunities are available, equal pay is not: only 59 countries
form the same sample of countries legally require equal pay for work of equal value. 19
20. Finally, legal barriers may force women to choose between domestic responsibilities
and outside employment. As primary caretakers for children and households, women are
not always permitted to engage in paid employment, and family and personal laws may
prevent a woman from making employment decisions without her husband’s permission.
Meanwhile, some countries featured highly discriminatory family laws that gave husbands
authority over their wives in marriage including rights over property, and divorce filings.
Women also often struggle with maternity protection and child care as those carrying the
primary responsibility for domestic work.
A. Property rights
1. Land Rights
21. One of the most substantial factors enabling women to thrive as food producers –
either for income support or subsistence – is women's ability to own and access land.
Unfortunately, the exclusion of women from land ownership is a global phenomenon. The
15 Ibid.
16 Ibid pp 58-108
17 Op Cit. FAO, The State of Food and Agriculture Women In Agriculture – Closing the Gender Gap for
Development”, Foreword, p. 33.
18 World Bank 2015c. “Women, Business and the Law Database.” Accessed January 2015. Washington,
DC: World Bank
19 World Bank 2015c. “Women, Business and the Law Database.” Accessed January 2015. Washington,
DC: World Bank.
share of landholdings, owned by women in Africa, ranges from than 5% to 30%. 20
In a
recent study on the situation of women and their right to land in Central America,
researchers found that in all countries, laws exist that recognize that equality of rights
between men and women. Despite this, a profound gap remains between formal equality
and equality in practice. This gap results in women owning less land, which tends to be of
worse quality and with less judicial security. Central American women only have access to
between 12% and 23% of land. 21
22. The Philippines also demonstrates discriminatory land distribution. While the country
legally allows women to own land, the “invisibility” of women within the food production
system has created structural barriers that prevent them from accessing productive
resources. There is a correlation between land ownership and access to productive resources
including credit, inputs, varieties of seeds and inorganic fertilizers, farming equipment, and
extension services including credit. As a result, less than 3 percent of women who work in
the agriculture and fisheries sectors in the Philippines benefit from support services such as
credit, seeds, training, and access to technology, therefore making it almost impossible to
secure a sustainable income and livelihood. 22
23. Women’s property ownership is a significant indicator of poverty, and a key factor
in securing increased participation in household decision making. Granting women the
autonomy to make everyday choices has been proven to improve reproductive health,
family nutrition, and child welfare. Land ownership also helps strengthen women’s roles in
community affairs and women’s bargaining power.23
2. Inheritance
24. Inheritance is often the main avenue for women’s land acquisition, yet women are
still less likely to inherit land than men. Inheritance is often determined through marriage
practices. Through patri-linearism, which is the most common societal system, sons, rather
than daughters, inherit land from their fathers. Even where bilateral inheritance practices
exist, communities may favor customary patrilineal practices. This is so in the case of the
Mossi community in Burkina Faso “where despite the fact that the majority of families
are Muslim, meaning that in theory daughters inherit land, this practice is not
observed.” 24
25. For married women, the death of a husband does not guarantee her ownership rights
of the decedent’s property. In Uganda for example, a co-ownership clause was added to the
Land Act of 1998, which technically vested the land title in both the husband and wife;
however, upon the death of the husband, any .children of the marriage are legally allowed
to take land from the mother. 25
Similarly, among the Hmong and Khmu, the largest ethnic
groups in Lao PDR, women are primarily considered as guardians of their children’s
20 Marcela Villarreal, Decreasing Gender Inequality in Agriculture: Key to Eradicating Hunger, 20
Brown J. World Aff. 169 (2013-2014)
21 Tierra para nosotras, Propuestas políticas de las mujeres rurales centroamericanas para el acceso a la
tierra, 2015, Red Centroamericana de Mujeres Rurales Indigenas y Campresinas (RECMURIC).
22 Upcoming Country visit report, Philippines 2015
23 ActionAid International, Securing women’s rights to land and livelihoods a key to ending hunger and
fighting AIDS, ActionAid International Briefing Paper (June 2008).
24 The World Bank, FAO, IFAD, Gender in Agriculture Sourcebook, Washington, 2009, p. 143.
25 A. Mari Tripp, Women’s Movements, Customary Law, and Land Rights in Africa: The Case of
Uganda, Afr. Stud. Q, 8.
inheritance rather than heirs in their own right and additionally single women are prohibited
from living independently. 26
3. Property ownership within marriage
26. When land is purchased during a marriage, women may lack equitable ownership.
Societies with customary law often exclude joint ownership based on the belief that women
are not capable of owning land. In market economies, when societal norms have recognized
community property between spouses, joint ownership of property acquired during
marriage is commonly accepted but patriarchal norms can still result in elusive recognition
of gender-equal property rights.
4. State action
27. Between 1990 and 2010, many Latin American and sub-Saharan African countries
engaged in land reform to establish formal laws that recognize and protect women’s rights
to land. According to the 2015 UNWOMEN’s Progress of the World’s Women Report, “by
2014, 128 countries had laws that guarantee married women’s equality when it comes to
property, and in 112 countries daughters had equal inheritance rights to sons”.27
28. These are positive developments but unfortunately, formal laws have not sufficiently
secured property rights of women, largely due to the prevalence of customary laws. In
many African countries the existence of “dual legal systems” reflecting both customary
laws and common law tends to complicate land ownership. 28
In Asia, many countries
retain personal or religious law that prevails over formal laws in practice, which effectively
prevent women from owning land. Additionally in many cases, formal laws and state
institutions have limited reach beyond urban centers.
29. Formal laws could also prove ineffective if women do not realize or assume control
over their rights. For example, in 2005, India amended the Hindu Succession Act (1956) to
allow men and women equal inheritance to agricultural land. However, according to a 2013
study, challenges in the implementation of the Act had been observed, allegedly as a result
of women not being aware of their legal rights and not wanting to upset their families and
resistance from their brothers amongst other reasons. 29
30. State action can also be a source of discriminatory land distribution. A state may
engage in land redistribution through various measures, including land reform, large scale
appropriation, and privatization programs. At times, land distribution intended to benefit
marginalized groups only benefits male heads of household. Recent land reform programs
have tried to address this inequity by specifically allocating land to women, or
acknowledging joint property rights. 30
However, many countries still come up short, even
when gender equality is explicitly articulated as a policy objective in such programs. This
26 E. Mann and N. Luangkhot,, Lao-German Land Policy Development Project, (2008), pp. 14, 24, 47.
27 World Bank 2015c. “Women, Business and the Law Database.” Accessed January
2015. Washington, DC: World Bank. This is not out of all the countries in the world, but out of 139
and 138 countries with available data respectively. World Bank 2015c.
28 Nia K. N. Jackson, All Players to the Table: Getting Total Buy-in to An Economic Approach to
Women’s Land Rights Reform,10 J. Int’l Bus. & L. (2011), pp 189, 196-199.
29 A. Sircar and S.PAL, Landesa “The Formal and Informal Barriers in the Implementation, of the
Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act 2005.” Paper prepared for presentation at the 2014 world bank
conference on land and poverty, The World Bank – Washington DC, March 24-27, (2014)
https://www.academia.edu/15882078/What_is_preventing_women_from_inheriting_land_A_Study_o
f_implementation_of_Hindu_Succession_Act_in_three_states_of_India
30 The World Bank, FAO, IFAD, Gender in Agriculture Sourcebook, pp. 137 – 138.
has also been true for States’ response to large-scale resettlements in the face of
development projects.
B. Intellectual Property Rights
31. Historically, efforts to increase the global food supply did not apply the intellectual
property rights (IPR) regime to agricultural innovation. 31
In most communities, farming
practices, such as seed exchanges were communal activities, unrestricted by law.
Furthermore, most agricultural research and development (R&D) was funded by the public
sector. Today, however, industrialized agriculture mostly replaced traditional communal
farming and has been inspired by competitive market for agricultural innovations to
increase production. Over the past few decades, funding for agricultural R&D has shifted to
private companies. The ten largest agricultural biotechnology companies invest roughly
EUR1.69 billion a year on new product development, amounting to about 7.5 percent of
these companies total sales revenue. 32
To ensure that these companies recoup development
costs for agricultural technologies and continue to invest in the R&D, an IPR-agricultural
framework has emerged.
32. Unfortunately, the IPR regime disproportionately excludes women, particularly in
the context of agriculture. For example, IPR tends to reward “high technology” but ignores
the contributions that the female labour force makes to agricultural production. 33
Meanwhile, the privatization of agricultural resources leads to increased monetization.
Women are less likely than men to have discretionary income, and are therefore less able to
afford expensive seeds that were once managed communally. 34
33. Furthermore, the IPR regime does not readily acknowledge the value of women’s
traditional knowledge, which may cover a broad range of agricultural practices,
technologies and techniques. In addition, women are faced with the threat of bio-piracy: the
practice of co-opting and patenting traditional knowledge, without awarding appropriate
compensation.
1. Seed Saving: Elimination of Women’s Role in Food Security
34. The greatest implication of the IPR regime on women and their right to food relates
to seed saving, a practice that is both predominantly controlled by women and a critical
component of small-scale, subsistence agriculture. Studies show that up to 90% of planting
materials used in smallholder agriculture are seeds and germ plasms that are produced,
selected, and saved by women. 35 Seeds and seed banks are important for addressing the
31 J. Long, Global Food Security and Intellectual Property Rights, 21 Mich. St. U. Coll. L. Int’l L. Rev.
115, 118 (2013)
32 C. Jewell, Who Benefits From IP Rights in Agricultural Innovation? WIPO (2015)
http://www.wipo.int/wipo_magazine/en/2015/04/article_0003.html
33 K. Mukhopadhyay, The Negative Impact of TRIPS on Gender Rights in Access Health and Food in
India: A Study of the Dynamics of Knowledge Economy and Neo-Medieval Governance, U. of
Denver 48 (2014)
34 UNDP, Policy Paper: Intellectual Property, Agrobiodiversity and Gender Considerations “Issues and
Case Studies from the Andean and South Asian Regions” (2010)
35 V. Shiva and J. Kunwar, Impact of WTO on Women in Agriculture, New Delhi, Navdanya Research
Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology for National Commission for Women (2005)
crisis of agricultural biodiversity, for ensuring sustainable livelihood solutions for food security, and for empowering women with a sustainable livelihood.
36
35. Globally, women have bred more than 7,000 species of crops. 37
In India alone, seed
saving has enabled women to breed 200,000 varieties of rice. 38
Biodiversity offers the
genetic variation necessary to protect against diseases, pests, and weather events that
threaten to wipe out food supplies.
36. Meanwhile, global agribusiness and biotechnology corporations have transformed
the global commercial seed market into a multi-billion dollar industry 39
and four companies
alone account for 50% of this market. 40
With such lucrative monopolies at stake, these
international corporations have actively exercised the IPR regime to secure exclusive access
to, and thus royalties from, patented seeds.
37. As a result of IPR laws, seeds that would have once been saved and shared are now
the intellectual property of corporations. Recent litigation demonstrates that corporations
are willing to appeal to the law to protect their property. Since 1997, Monsanto reports that
it has filed 147 lawsuits against those farmers who failed to “honor this agreement,” i.e.
Monsanto’s intellectual property rights.41
38. The fact that 73% of the world’s seed supply is owned and patented by these
corporations and are therefore non-renewable 42
, presents women with a major dilemma
being. They are accustomed to seed saving and sharing, and would have o chose between
discontinuing the traditional practice of saving and exchanging seeds or risk punishment for
an intellectual property crime.
IV. Economic barriers
A. Changing global economic policy and the rise of corporate models of
agriculture
39. Non-corporate agricultural producers, and particularly women, have suffered from
evolution in agricultural policy and economic trends over the past several decades. The
devastating structural adjustment policies imposed throughout much of the developing
world in the past decades, largely as a precondition of receiving development assistance or
joining the global trade regime, have resulted in an overall loss in agricultural productivity,
decreased yields, and increasingly precarious rural livelihoods. 43
36
F. Akhter, Reflections on Empowerment, in Seeds of Movements: On Women’s Issues in Bangladesh, Dhaka: Naringrantha Prabartana, (F. Akhter ed., 2007);
37
Vandana Shiva, Day 3: Seeds in Women’s Hands, OXFAM Int’l GROW Blog Channel, (Nov. 21, 2012) https://blogs.oxfam.org/en/blogs/seeds-in-womens-hands
38
id.
39 ETC Group, Putting the Cartel Before the Horse…and Farm, Seeds, Soil, Peasants, Etc.: Who Will
Control Agricultural Inputs, 2013 No. 111 (2013) at 7.
40 Op.Cit.
41
Why Does Monsanto Sue Farmers Who Save Seeds? Monsanto
http://www.monsanto.com/newsviews/pages/why-does-monsanto-sue-farmers-who-save-seeds.aspx
42
Vandana Shiva, Day 3: Seeds in Women’s Hands, Oxfam Int’l grow blog channel, (Nov. 21, 2012)
https://blogs.oxfam.org/en/blogs/seeds-in-womens-hands;
43
FAO “The State of Food and Agriculture Women In Agriculture – Closing the Gender Gap for
Development”, 2011, p 13.
40. Woman food producers have been particularly disadvantaged by these policies and
there is limited recourse, since the WTO Agreement on Agriculture requires member States
to “refrain from introducing new forms of domestic support for agricultural production,”
most of which are designed to help support small scale and subsistence women farmers. 44
41. Agricultural trade liberalization is generally premised on export-promotion policies
that benefit men and larger-scale farmers. Liberalization has also opened smaller markets to
subsidized imports, thus displacing the farmed products of local women, and encouraging
the production of export crops over subsistence agriculture. Women are struggling to
maintain household incomes due to increased competition with imported agricultural goods,
reduced prices, and declining commodity prices in international markets.
42. The trade liberalization policies heavily favor large corporate agribusinesses and a
large-scale model of agricultural production, at the expense of the most vulnerable and
marginalized small-scale agricultural producers. Women tend to engage in agricultural
production on a scale that is not compatible with a large, corporate model of farming,
holding smaller plots than men, which are, on average, 20 – 30 percent less productive than
plots managed by men. 45
43. Agro-biotechnology is also a large part of the corporate model of agriculture, and it
poses specific challenges for women. Women generally lack necessary training in
technology and experience “time poverty” that prevents them from accessing relevant
education. As a result, women are less likely to understand the negative impacts of
technological developments and the effective and safe use of technology. 46
Women also
have limited participation in the development of agro-biotechnology, so such technologies
often fail to account for needs of women.
B. The extra burdens on female farmworkers
44. Most of the world’s poor who live and work in rural areas are employed in the
agriculture sector. Globally, 20 – 30% of the 450 million waged agricultural workers are
women, as are 30 % of those employed in the fishing sector and this number is increasing. 47
Yet, women face difficulty in engaging in market behavior when cultural norms make it
socially unacceptable for women to interact with men.
45. Even without formal prohibitions to market access, structural barriers may challenge
women’s ability to produce in sufficient volumes, establish relationships with buyers, or
market their goods. Women may also not have sufficient time to engage in market activities
as a result of their unpaid work burdens. As a result, women are particularly disadvantaged
by “free” markets. Female farm-workers are often excluded from the benefits of the
contract farming arrangements central to the agro-industrial model of contemporary
agriculture. Men largely control the contract arrangements while women perform much of
the waged agricultural labour. 48
44 mita Narula, Reclaiming the Right to Food as a Normative Response to the Global Food Crisis, 13
YALE HUM. RTS. & DEV. L. J. 403, 409 (2010)
45 Villareal – Gender and Food Security at p. 5
46 UNCTAD “ nclusive and gender-sensitive development paths” –, TD/456, 4 (2012).
47 TNI/FIAN/IGO/FDCL (2014) Women agricultural workers and the right to adequate nutrition
(Heidelberg: FIAN) [insert web link here] at pp. 6, Biswas, N. 2013. Note from the Editor. Yemaya
42 (March): 1.
48 FAO “The State of Food and Agriculture Women In Agriculture – Closing the Gender Gap for
Development” p 13.
46. Moreover, agricultural labour is one of the most dangerous sectors in which to work,
particularly for women. It is physically demanding and safety standards are often low or
non-existent, and protective equipment and clothing are often designed with men in mind.
Women are also most often engaged on a piecework basis, which motivates them to put
their health at risk to complete as much work as possible. 49
In Guatemala, allegations of
serious breaches of this kind were received by the UN Country Office in 2014, referring to
the widespread practice of tying wages to productivity goals, which in turn affected women
proportionally more, as they were often forced to work in an unrecognized manner, helping
the men reach those goals. 50
Women agricultural workers also face rights violations related
to their reproductive roles. Exposure to certain chemicals used in agriculture can cause
spontaneous abortions, premature births and affect child and infant development through
exposure to toxic chemicals in utero and also by way of breastmilk. 51
As a result of
discriminatory hiring practices, women often hide their pregnancies and employers often
hire women on short-term contracts in order to avoid paying maternity benefits. 52
47. Much of the discrimination against women agricultural workers is partly due to the
fact that women are absent from supervisory structures and unions. Women involved in
unions can face retaliation from their employers. Migrant women workers with precarious
immigration status are particularly vulnerable and may prefer not to engage in activities
potentially challenging employer-authority, including joining unions and reporting sexual
abuse. 53
48. The food security of women in farming households and landless labourers is
dependent on the adequacy of their wages. 54
Rural labour markets are highly gender-
segregated and women are more likely to work in low- wage sectors, with inadequate social
protection, in temporary, seasonal and casual work, and in activities that require relatively
unskilled labour.
49. Many food producers and agricultural labourers are unable to feed their families as
commercial farmers “relentlessly” try to save on labour costs through the casualization of
the labour force. 55
State support intended to ameliorate this problem is also lacking.
50. Similarly, fisherwomen contribute significantly to the work carried out at the
different stages within the fishing industry the role they play is largely undervalued.
Despite their direct contribution to fishing economy, women fishers are categorically
excluded from state-sponsored benefits, facilities and services.
49 Op. Cit, TNI/FIAN/IGO/FDCL (2014) Women agricultural workers and the right to adequate
nutrition (Heidelberg: FIAN) [insert web link here] at p. 9.
50 A/HRC/28/3/Add.1, para 69-70
51 IUF. 2007. A Gender Equality Guide for Trade Unionists in the Agriculture, Food, Hotel and
Catering Sectors: All for One =One for All.
http://www.inclusivecities.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Mather_IUF_All_for_One.pdf (accessed
20.04.2014).At 14.
52 Longley, S. 2013. “Decent Work for Rural Women Workers – Essential for Ensuring their Right to
Food” in The Right to Food and Nutrition Watch. 2013: 36-39.
http://www.rtfnwatch.org/fileadmin/media/rtfn-
watch.org/ENGLISH/pdf/Watch_2013/Watch_2013_PDFs/Watch_2013_eng_WEB_final.pdf
(accessed 22.04.2014) at p. 38
53 Human Rights Watch. 2012. Cultivating Fear: The Vulnerability of Immigrant Farmworkers in the
US to Sexual Violence and Sexual Harassment. (May 12 2014).
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2012/05/15/cultivating-fear (accessed 20.04.2014). p. 84.
54 Sen, A. (1982). Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
55 Id p. 60.
51. However, the broad category of female-headed households should be differentiated
further, as households face different socio-economic circumstances, resulting in different
outcomes regarding their livelihoods and food and nutrition security. Research among
South African farmworkers revealed that certain female-headed households, although
having less access to earned income compared to male-headed households, achieved greater
food and nutrition security than comparable households with male headship. This was due
to women having better access to social grants, remittances, and income obtained through
informal work. This highlights the crucial role of women’s access to resources and power
relations within households for greater food and nutrition security 56
.
C. Women’s non-agricultural livelihoods and the right to food
52. Disadvantages for women in both agricultural and non-agricultural sectors
undermine their right to food. Women’s income possibilities are more constrained than
men’s; the women’s participation in the labour force is lower than men on a global scale –
70 percent of working age men are in the labour force compared to only 40 percent of
working age women 57
and the labour force participation rates have stagnated around the
world in the past two decades. 58
53. Women earn an average of 24 percent less than men, resulting in between a 31 and
75 percent lifetime reduction in income and they are also less likely to receive a pension. 59
International Labour Organization (ILO) data shows that occupational segregation is
significant, with women over-represented in clerical and support positions and in service
and sales roles compared to managerial occupations, skilled work in agriculture and
fisheries and in craft and trade occupations. 60
Unfortunately, this occupational segregation
does not reduce with new economic development. Instead, occupational segregation results
in a lower quality of work accessible to women, as well as a “stubbornly persistent” wage
gap outside of the agricultural sector, which affects women’s income and their ability to
purchase food. 61
54. Even when women successfully earn income to support their families, men often
respond by withdrawing their contribution to the household budget in order to purchase
luxuries. 62
A recent study in Nicaragua showed that if mothers contributed considerably to
household income the likelihood of moderate and severe food insecurity decreased by 34
56 Lemke and Bellows 2016, Chapter 5 in Bellows et al. 2016; see also Lemke S, Bellows AC,
Heumann N 2009. Gender and Sustainable Livelihoods: Case Study of South African Farm Workers,
International Journal of Innovation and Sustainable Development, 4 (2-3): 195-205.
57 Op Cit. FAO, The State of Food and Agriculture Women In Agriculture – Closing the Gender Gap for
Development”,
58 UN Women (2015) Progress of the World’s Women Transforming economies, realizing rights 2015 –
2016 http://progress.unwomen.org, at p 71.
59 ILO 2015c. “Key Indicators of the Labour Market (KILM) Database.” Accessed January 2015.
http://www.ilo.org/empelm/what/WCMS_114240/lang--en/index.htm
60 ILO 2015c. “Key Indicators of the Labour Market (KILM) Database.” Accessed January 2015.
http://www.ilo.org/empelm/what/WCMS_114240/lang--en/index.htm.
61 World Bank 2011. World Development Report 2012: Gender Equality and Development.
Washington, DC: World Bank p. 205.
62 The World Bank, FAO, IFAD, Gender in Agriculture Sourcebook, Washington, 2009 p. 90.
percent, and, if mothers were the main decision-makers over household income this
decrease amounted to 60 percent. 63
55. In the absence of additional support for care work at home, women dependents –
children and the elderly – may be further disadvantaged by women working outside the
home to earn an income. Daughters, for example, may dropped off from school to fill the
care gap. Clearly, this speaks to the discrimination of women in participation in the labour
market, if care work remains the main or sole responsibility of women.
V. Ecological Barriers - Climate Change
56. Climate change is one of the foremost contemporary threats to food security. The
agriculture sector is under substantial stress from climate change-induced increases in
temperature, variability in rainfall and extreme weather events that trigger crop failures, pests and disease outbreaks, as well as the degradation of land and water resources.
64
57. It is widely acknowledged that climate change impacts are not gender-neutral. As
already marginalized individuals in virtually every society, women face discrimination and
are subject to human rights abuses at a disproportionate rate, further accelerated by climate
change.
58. Women have multiple responsibilities as heads of households, caregivers, and
subsistence farmers, and balancing these roles is increasingly challenging in the face of
climate change. Women also participate in a wide range of activities that support
sustainable agricultural development, such as soil and water conservation, agro-ecology,
afforestation and crop domestication and are vital to adaptation and mitigation policies.
59. The successful implementation of climate change policies and projects requires an
understanding of the gender-based roles and relationships vis-à-vis natural resources, as
well as the gender-differentiated impacts of climate change. The Beijing Declaration in
1995 was the first international declaration to recognize the links between gender equality
and climate change. It took a long time for international climate change policy makers to
address gender dimensions of climate change. The United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC) process referred to gender considerations only in
“Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation” (REDD+) and response
measures, with the latter only referring to women as a “vulnerable group”. In recent years,
progress has been made in integrating gender equality in the COP decisions. It remains
uncertain how the gender perspective to climate change policies will be acknowledged in
the upcoming document of the climate change agreement.
60. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development also acknowledges the critical
importance of advancing gender equality and empowering women and girls to realize
sustainable development. Many of the climate-related SDGs include gender-specific
targets, including those related to ownership and control over land and access to new
technology (SDG1), women small-scale food producers (SDG2), and water and sanitation
(SDG6). These goals provide a mandate for advancing gender equality and women’s
empowerment across all areas of climate change action.
63 Schmeer KK, Piperata BA, Rodríguez AH, Torres VMS, Cárdenas FJC 2015. Maternal resources and
household food security: evidence from Nicaragua. Public Health Nutrition 18(16): 1-10,
doi:10.1017/S1368980014003000.
64 See Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to food to the General Assembly, July 2014,
A/70/Slot 36200
61. However, the system still needs to incorporate a human rights approach, including
participatory monitoring systems to evaluate standards as well as mechanisms to seek
remedy for violations of human rights, particularly for women. A human rights approach
emphasizes local self-determination that frustrated by externally imposed ownership and
promotes control over critical and traditional local resources like water, land, and
biodiversity.
A. Why women matter in climate change policies?
1. Disaster Management
62. One area of concern is disaster management because climate change is likely to
impact the number and severity of extreme weather events. Researches show that in
societies where men and women should be impacted indiscriminately in disasters women
and girls, as a result of gender based inequalities, are up to 14 times more likely to die in
the event of a disaster. 65
This is especially true of elderly women, those with disabilities,
pregnant and nursing women, and those with small children, who may have lack of, or
limited mobility and resources, and therefore remain most at risk in cases of emergency. 66
63. Women remain more vulnerable than men in post-disaster situations, as their
household responsibilities increase while access to resources decreases. The daily work
involved in providing food, water, and fuel for households after a disaster requires intensive
labour, the bulk of which is borne by women. Moreover, marketing interference with
breastfeeding initiation and long-term prolongation jeopardizes women’s ability to safely
feed their infants and young children due to unreliable quality and quantity of safe drinking
water, particularly in post-disaster situations.
64. Climate change itself intensifies psychological stress associated with disasters,
increasing women’s risks of situations of violence, sexual harassment and trafficking. Some
women are forced into prostitution and research has shown increased HIV prevalence in
drought-ridden areas of rural Africa. 67
65. In Central America and the Caribbean, women assume leadership roles in food
distribution during emergencies, yet emergency decision-making processes after disasters
often exclude women. Women’s limited participation restricts their engagement in political
decisions that impact their specific needs and vulnerabilities, and relief workers often view
women as victims rather than potential agents of change, thus reinforcing gender
inequalities.
2. Women’s livelihoods and household responsibilities
66. In rural areas, women and girls spend the majority of their time engaged in
subsistence farming and in the collection of water and fuel. As a result of flooding,
droughts, fires and mudslides, these tasks become more difficult. Water shortages and
depletion of forests require women and girls to walk longer distances to collect water and
wood. In Senegal and Mozambique, women spend 17.5 and 15.3 hours respectively each
65 Lorena Aguilar, http://www.capwip.org/Phillipinas%20presentacion%20-
%20Lorena%20Aguilar.pdf,
http://countryoffice.unfpa.org/zimbabwe/2015/07/11/12467/when_disaster_strikes_women_and_girls
_are_the_backbone_of_resilience ( 2008)
66 HLPE Report, Climate Change and Food Security, June 2012 Committee of Food Security Report
67 Burke, Gong, Jones, “Income shocks and HIV in Africa, in The Economic Journal”, Vol 125, Issue
585, 2015, pp 1157-1189.
week collecting water. In Nepal, girls spend an average of five hours per week on this task.
In rural Africa and India, 30 percent of women’s daily energy intake is spent in carrying
water. Depletion of land and water resources may place additional burdens on women’s
labour and health as they struggle to make their livelihoods in a changing environment. 68
67. The impact of environmental degradation and biodiversity loss on common property
resources threatens household food security and livelihoods. Women who lack land tenure
depend on common resources, for subsistence. This decreases the time available for food
production and preparation, and threatens women’s safety, with consequences for
household food security and nutritional well-being.
68. Impacts of decreased water quality as a result of climate change are also gender
differentiated. Children and pregnant women are more physically vulnerable to waterborne
diseases and their role in supplying household water and performing domestic chores
makes them more vulnerable to developing diseases, such as diarrhea and cholera, which
thrive in degraded water. Decreased water resources may also cause women’s health to
suffer as a result of the increased work burden and reduced nutritional status. For instance,
in Peru following the 1997–98 El Niño events, malnutrition among women was a major
cause of peripartum illness. 69
3. Challenges to women farmers
69. Insecure land tenure reduces rural women’s and men’s incentives to make long-term
investments in soil rehabilitation and conservation, which are crucial to agricultural land
management in era of climate change and resource scarcity. A reduction of agricultural
productivity and more competition for productive land leave women with the more
marginal and fragile lands. Tools are often reserved for men’s plots of land and women
may not use technological adaptation techniques. 70
In a Sub-Saharan African county,
women, have limited access to irrigation or other farm technology, such as motorized tillers
that would increase productivity and offset negative impacts of climatic shocks. 71
70. Crop failure caused by slow-onset disasters such as land degradation and drought
has resulted in the increase of men’s out-migration in developing world. Women are often
left behind to struggle to feed their families to take on men’s traditional roles and
responsibilities. This increases women’s work, but does not grant women equal access to
financial, technological, and social resources to lessen the burden.
4. Mitigation Strategies
71. A gendered approach to climate change adaptation and mitigation is necessary to
combat the vulnerabilities women face because of existing social, economic and political
inequalities. Mitigation activities aim to decrease greenhouse gas emissions through support
for technology development and capacity building. These activities also provide important
opportunities to improve women’s health and livelihoods by creating new opportunities for
68 The World Bank, FAO, IFAD, Gender in Agriculture Sourcebook, Washington, 2009 p. 455 – 456.
69 Id at 143 – 145.
70 S. Saulière, , Climate change and women farmers in Burkina Faso. Oxfam Research Reports, (2011),
Retrieved from www.oxfam.com/grow.
71 Beaman & Dillon
The Diffusion of Agricultural Technologies within Social Networks: Evidence from Composting in
Mali, http://womenandclimate.ifpri.info/files/2014/09/PN_2014_GCC_04_replaced_web.pdf, IFPRI
e-library.
women particularly in the renewable energy sector. 72
Development programs that support
the distribution of clean cook-stoves have had a significant impact on reducing emissions
and limiting premature deaths and illness linked to indoor air pollution, particularly
benefiting women and children. 73
72. Despite women’s role in collecting biofuels for household use, women are often
excluded from energy plans and policies because energy is associated with electricity and
fossil fuels and is therefore considered to be within men’s domain.
73. More needs to be done to improve opportunities for women to participate in the
green economy, notably through ensuring that women benefit equally from employment
opportunities arising from development projects focusing on clean technology and
renewable energy. 74
5. Adaptation Strategies
74. Adaptation strategies are adjustments made to ecological, social or economic
systems in response to actual or expected effects or impacts of climate change. In general,
adaptation policies and measures need to be gender sensitive, taking into account women’s
lack of control and access to land, resources, transportation, information, technology, and
ultimately decision-making. 75
Data from several countries suggest that men and women
have different needs, priorities, and preferences for adaptation and, indeed, men and women
tend to report engaging in different adaptation strategies. Women tend to adopt certain
practices more readily than men, including cover cropping with legumes to increase soil
fertility and improve food security and feed management practices for livestock. 76
75. Oxfam researchers found that adaptation projects aimed at women created under
Burkina Faso’s National Action Programme for Adaptation (NAPA) sought to diversity the
ways that women can generate income to offset income lost by harvests damaged by
climate change. 77
In order to rectify these consequences, individuals and organizations need
to be better educated on the different vulnerabilities that men and women face in disasters,
and local women’s organizations need to be consulted in order to understand region-
specific contexts. Moreover, such attempts could have ancillary positive effects, as developing credit systems to aid families during times of famine, strengthening women’s
organizations that promote adaptation measures, and addressing larger issues could prevent
gender inequality. 78
72 UNDP , Powerful Synergies. Gender Equality, Economic Development, and Environmental
Sustainability. (2012) http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/librarypage/womens-
empowerment/powerful-synergies.html
73 See Justice, Human Rights, and Climate Change: A Conversation with Mary Robinson, UN
Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Climate Change, 39 Flecher F World A Letcher F. World
AFF.. 9, 10 (2015)
74 ILO, Green jobs: improving the climate for gender equality too!, 2008.
http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/@dgreports/@gender/documents/publication/wcms_10150
5.pdf
75 Röhr, U. Gender, climate change and adaptation: Introduction to the gender dimensions. In
Background paper prepared for the Both Ends Briefing Paper Berlin: Genanet. . (2007).
http://www.unep.org/roa/amcen/Projects_Programme/climate_change/PreCop15/Proceedings/Gender
-and-climate-change/Roehr_Gender_climate.pdf
76 E. Bryan, P. Kristjanson and C. Ringler “Why paying attention to gender matters for climate change
adaptation”, (2015) , IFPRI Blogh, (2015)
77 S. Saulière. (2011), “Climate change and women farmers in Burkina Faso”. Oxfam Research Reports,
(2011), www.oxfam.com/grow.
78 UNDP “Resource guide on gender and climate change”(2009).
76. In all adaptation projects women should be granted access to the same level of
technology and financing as men. This will help women change agricultural practices as
well as preserve livelihoods during times of drought. Addressing issues of resource
management and land ownership will also improve women’s chances against climate
change. Ultimately, communities must take a “bottom-up” approach in order to accurately
understand local customs and to incorporate local knowledge; applying a model that relies
upon opinions from international institutions or outside groups will not be as effective.
6. Agro-ecology
77. Agro-ecology is a reaction against the agricultural policies promoted by the Green
Revolution that have replaced traditional farming with GMO seeds, extreme use of
fertilization, and intensive resource use. 79
It offers an important means through which
women farmers can adapt to climate change, recognizes women as legitimate actors, and
opens spaces for women to become more autonomous and empowered at productive,
reproductive, and community levels. 80 At the same time, agro-ecology is a proven
alternative farming method to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
78. With the increased commercialization of agriculture and highly technological
improvements, farming systems are overly dependent on external inputs such as
agrochemicals. Poor rural women and men farmers often spread risk by growing a wide
variety of locally-adapted crops, some of which will be resistant to drought or pests, and
livestock breeds that have adapted to the local agro ecological zone. Diversification, an
important coping strategy adopted by poor rural households, also protects women against
climate change, desertification, and other environmental stresses.
B. How to ensure gender sensitive climate change policies?
1. Participation into decision making in an effective manner
79. In order for adaptation and mitigation strategies to effectively take gender into
account, they must provide women with the opportunity to be active members of the
planning and implementation of such policies. Helping women participate fully in the
process of adaptation will require concerted effort by decision-makers to overcome the
multiple barriers of control over resources, lack of access to information, and socio-cultural
constraints. Local adaptation policies need to be designed by both women and men in order
to build upon existing knowledge and grant women access to the rights, resources and
opportunities necessary to surviving climate change in the years to come.
2. Integrating gender-disaggregated data and gender perspective to research
80. Not enough agricultural research and development efforts have focused on options
that meet women's specific needs and situations related to childcare, food preparation, and
the collection of domestic water and energy resources. New research based on gender-
disaggregated data shed light on gender differences in perceptions on climate change and
the ability to adopt practices and technologies needed to increase resilience. 81
These data
79 See Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to food to the General Assembly, July 2014,
A/70/Slot 36200
80 A. Lopes and E Jomalinis Feminist Perspectives Towards Transforming Economic Power:
Agroecology, , The Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID) , (.2011) ,
http://www.observatoriodegenero.gov.br/menu/noticias/2fpttec-agroecology-eng1.pdf
81 CAFS; IFPRI; ILRI , “Gender Household Survey”, , 2013.http://hdl.handle.net/1902.1/22584,
Harvard Dataverse, V4
also show that men and women have different preferences, needs, and priorities for the
ways in which they respond to climate change. There is also a greater need for using
gender-disaggregated data to inform evidence-based policy making as well as integrating a
gender perspective into research on climate change and mitigation and adaptation
strategies.
3. Access to information and technology
83. Women lack access to information about climate change, and this knowledge is
critical to support adaptation, promote well-being and increase resilience to climate change.
Women are more likely than men to adopt climate-adaptive and resilient practices, but most
women do not have access to formal sources of information, such as extension agents.
84. Researchers and breeders often work in isolation from women and men farmers and
are sometimes unaware of their needs and priorities beyond yield and resistance to pests
and diseases. Moreover, extension agents and research organizations tend to consider many
local varieties and breeds to be low-performing and inferior. As a result, national policies
that provide incentives such as loans and direct payments for the use of modern varieties
and breeds contribute to the loss of genetic diversity and affect traditional gender roles. 82
4. Gender sensitive financial aid
85. Climate-related financial aid is not gender equal. Almost no climate aid goes to
women, even though women experience a disproportionate amount of the impacts of
climate change. 83
Accelerated efforts are needed to ensure that gender equality is
mainstreamed throughout all climate change programs in all sectors, given the primary role
that women play in natural resource management, farming, working, raising small
livestock, and collecting fuel and water. Overcoming these challenges will require stronger
partnerships between research organizations, government agencies and NGOs in order to
continue to strengthen capacity of implementing organizations on gender and to build the
evidence base on gender and climate change by monitoring and evaluating gender
differences in participation in and outcomes of adaptation projects. A key challenge is the
lack of gender experts in government climate change adaptation program. 84
VI. Why a gender analysis is necessary to address the right to food?
86. Gender analysis is important for understanding the causes of hunger and
malnutrition, due to women’s special role in the food systems. The central role of women in
food production, household food management and the important consequences of gender
relations for food security have been widely documented. Yet, women cannot easily access
productive assets including land, water, seed, machinery and livestock, credit and other
financial services. 85
Women also face discrimination to access to food as an individual
consumer.
82 The World Bank, FAO, IFAD, Gender in Agriculture Sourcebook, Washington, 2009at p. 433 – 434.
83 OECD Network on Gender Equality, “Making Climate Change finance work for women: Overview
of the integration of gender equality in aid to climate change” , (2015).
http://www.oecd.org/dac/gender-development/Making-Climate-Finance-Work-for-Women.pdf
84 Ragasa at al (2014), http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/128771
85 Op Cit, FAO, “The State of Food and Agriculture Women In Agriculture – Closing the Gender Gap
for Development”,
87. The human rights perspective should accommodate a gender analysis for food
security, and allows focus on woman as an individual, rather than on the nation, the
community, or the household. At the same time, gender analysis should include other social
categories such as age, social status, race, ethnicity, and class. Adoption of the right to food
approach together with gender base analysis would reveal discrimination and inequality of
women in food production cycles and at household level in a more appropriate manner. A
person’s ability to acquire nutritious food is closely related to other aspects of the
capabilities and rights. For women and girls, discriminatory laws, social norms, values and
practices further affect access to food and food security. Moreover, unequal power relations
between genders, penetrate both the private and the public sphere, and constrain the
decision-making power of women and girls. The discrimination is reinforced when gender
inequality is compounded with other forms of exclusion related to income, ethnicity or race.
VII. Conclusions
88. Over the last few decades, women have broadened and deepened their
involvement in agricultural production as they increasingly shoulder the
responsibility for household survival and respond to economic opportunities in
commercial agriculture. This phenomenon brought the argument about gender gap in
agriculture, where women’s productivity as farmers falls behind that of men, and
where women remains less food secure, despite their dominant role is food production.
This gender gap occurs because of cultural, legal, and economic barriers, so and
eliminating this discrepancy requires a holistic understanding that responds to
structural discrimination and failed implementation of attempted solutions. For
instance, while international development has focused on providing technical training
and access to new agricultural technologies for women, there has been a lack of focus
on providing women with land rights and sufficient financial resources. 86
Moreover,
women’s responsibility in relation to household food security, simply feeding family
and community is totally excluded from such technical and economistic solution.
89. Closing the gender gap in agriculture requires development of gender sensitive
policies. Ensuring land rights and reinforcing the rights of girls and women to
education, social protection and increasing women’s participation in decision making
in a meaningful manner is critical for enhancing women's vital role in advancing
agricultural development and food security. Increasing women’s access to and control
over assets has been shown to have positive effects on important human development
outcomes including household food security, child nutrition, education, and women’s
own wellbeing and status within the home and community. Moreover, providing
women with essential tools and resources does not require a major investment of
resources but can have a huge impact on the formal economy. Respecting, protecting
and fulfilling women’s rights will inevitably fix broader problems in food systems in
general and can help communities achieve improved development outcomes.
90. The Special Rapporteur provides the following recommendations:
In order for States to address discrimination against women in terms of equal labour
opportunities, States should:
(a) Recognize, reduce and redistribute women’s unpaid care and domestic
work, in order to create more opportunities for them to enter the labour market.
86 Anna Applefield and Jiwon Jun, Working with Women: An Essential Component of Global Food
Security and Agricultural Development, 38 A Letcher F. World AFF. 185, 186 (2014)
(b) Ensure investment in basic social protection, services and infrastructure,
including health care and the provision of childcare services, which can allow women
to participate in paid work.
(c) Develop comprehensive measures to tackle discrimination and violence
in the workplace and ensure implementation of these measures at the domestic level.
(d) Ensure a sound policy and enabling environment to address the gender
gap in agriculture, including the provision of training for women and ensure that their
specific needs are taken into account.
(e) Ensure that women fishers, and livestock owners have equal access to
State sponsored benefits, facilities and services.
(f) Ensure gender mainstreaming in all adaptation and mitigation responses
to climate change and encourage policy-makers to work with both women and men
taking their views into consideration at all levels.
(g) Provide increased access to information for women in relation to climate
change, since the generally have less access to information in order for them to
support adaptation, promote well-being and increase resilience to climate change.
(h) Promote accelerated efforts in terms of financial aid, in order to ensure
that gender equality is mainstreamed throughout all climate change programs in all
sectors.